At Primary Leap, we offer high-quality educational resources designed to support teachers, parents, and students in achieving academic success. From interactive worksheets to creative lesson plans, our content is aligned with the UK National Curriculum and caters to KS1 and KS2 learners.
At Primary Leap, we offer high-quality educational resources designed to support teachers, parents, and students in achieving academic success. From interactive worksheets to creative lesson plans, our content is aligned with the UK National Curriculum and caters to KS1 and KS2 learners.
This worksheet covers the importance of the digestive system and how it works. Children must read the comprehension and answer the questions that follow. There is also a diagram to label.
This science comprehension includes some interesting facts about the digestive system and how it functions. The resource also includes accompanying study questions.
Unlock the wonders of Living Things and Their Habitats with this engaging Year 6 science workbook. With 12 worksheets designed to support classroom learning and independent study, this resource covers key topics such as invertebrate classification, microscopic protists, and the impact of Carl Linnaeus on scientific classification.
Packed with informative content and interactive activities, this workbook helps pupils develop critical thinking skills while exploring the diverse plant and animal habitats that shape our world. From insects to echinoderms, students will deepen their understanding of life on Earth in a way that sparks curiosity and encourages a love for science.
Perfect for educators, homeschooling, and revision, this resource provides a structured yet engaging approach to science learning.
Unit 3B: Helping plants grow well. This worksheet describes the process of photosynthesis. Students read the text and then answer the study questions. There is also an illustration included in the worksheet.
A great resource to use when teaching students about life cycles/animals. This worksheet includes some interesting facts about the life cycle of a frog. Students are asked to read through the text and answer the study questions. They must also draw the stages of the life cycle of a frog.
The koala spends most of its life in the trees, eating at night and sleeping for up to 18 hours a day. It lives in the eucalyptus forests of eastern Australia. The koala may look like a bear, but it is a marsupial.
Meerkats (Suricata suricatta) are very social animals and live in groups called mobs or gangs. They live in underground burrows in the Kalahari Desert and parts of South Africa. Their curved claws are used for digging and foraging for insects.
This is a great resource for sorting materials. Children are asked to look at the objects and fill in the columns. Is the object bendy, rigid, rough, smooth, or shiny?
Raccoons (Procyon lotor) are quick, agile creatures found in marshes, forests and prairies in North and South America. They are also found in cities where they feed on rubbish dumps and farm crops.